Archive for the 'Laptop Reviews' Category

Fujitsu: No U.S. LifeBook4Life program, for now

Fujitsu Siemens delivered an early holiday present to its U.K. customers late last week when it announced the “LifeBook4Life” program.
Essentially, anyone in the U.K. who buys a choose LifeBook laptop and a three-year warranty will be entitled to …

Vietnamese defense firm: Your face is easy to fake

This is me being enrolled by the Y430's Lenovo Veriface III authentication software to be a valid user of the computer.(Credit: Dong Ngo/CBS Interactive)

Editor’s note: CNET editor and Crave contributor Dong Ngo is spending the month of Decembe…

Dell opens Design Studio: custom lids for Studio laptops

To be honest, I’ve never thought Dell’s new Studio laptops did much to befit the Studio name. Dell trumpeted personalization when it launched the Studio line earlier that year, but aside from the standard rainbow of solid colors additionally found o…

gOS Cloud: browser-based OS for Netbooks

(Credit: Good OS)

Good OS, the humans who brought you the Linux-based gOS found on the $199 Wal-Mart gPC last year, announced a browser-based OS called Cloud at the Netbook World Summit in Paris on Monday. (You know you’ve made it as a design factor…

Asus releases brushed aluminum Eee PC 1002HA

A brushed aluminum chassis distinguishes the 1002HA from the rest of the Eee PC crowd.

Unveiled last month, Asus’ latest addition to its ever expanding Netbook line is the Eee PC 1002HA. It’s your standard 10-inch Netbook–Intel Atom N270 CPU, 1GB o…

Stocking stuffers for your MacBook — two new Targus Mac mice reviewed

Need a quick stocking stuffer for the Mac addict on your holiday gift list? We just reviewed a pair of new mice from accessory maker Targus that are specifically being pitched for use with MacBooks, iMacs, and other Apple computers.

A healthy side …

A Netbook that can handle games? We experiment the Asus N10J

We may think of Atom-powered Netbooks as the most basic of computers, good for Web surfing and e-mailing - but what would happen whether someone stuffed a discrete graphics chip into one of these low-power, low-price systems?

It took Asus, the guys…

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